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Tolentino

Tolentino
Comune
Comune di Tolentino
Panorama Tolentino -.jpg
Coat of arms of Tolentino
Coat of arms
Tolentino within the Province of Macerata
Tolentino within the Province of Macerata
Tolentino is located in Italy
Tolentino
Tolentino
Location of Tolentino in Italy
Coordinates: 43°13′N 13°23′E / 43.217°N 13.383°E / 43.217; 13.383
Country Italy
Region Marche
Province / Metropolitan city Macerata (MC)
Frazioni see list
Government
 • Mayor Giuseppe Pezzanesi (PdL)
Area
 • Total 94.86 km2 (36.63 sq mi)
Elevation 256 m (840 ft)
Population (28 February 2009)
 • Total 20,372
 • Density 210/km2 (560/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Tolentinati
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 62029
Dialing code 0733
Patron saint St. Catervus
Saint day October 17
Website Official website

Tolentino is a town and comune of about 20,000 inhabitants, in the province of Macerata in the Marche region of central Italy.

It is located in the middle of the valley of the Chienti.

Signs of the first inhabitants of this favorable and fertile coastal zone, between the mountains and the Adriatic, date to the lower Paleolithic.

Numerous tombs, from the 8th to the 4th centuries BCE, attest to the presence of the Piceni culture at the site of today's city, Roman Tolentinum, linked to Rome by the via Flaminia. Tolentinum was the seat of the diocese of Tolentino from the late 6th century, under the patronage of the local Saint Catervo. The urban commune is attested from 1099, assuming its mature communal form between 1170 and 1190, settling its boundaries through friction with neighboring communes like S. Severino and Camerino. From the end of the 14th century, the commune passed into the hands of the da Varano family and then the Sforza, before becoming part of the Papal States until the arrival of Napoleon.

The Treaty of Tolentino between Bonaparte and Pope Pius VI was signed in the city on 19 February 1797: this imposed territorial and economic strictures on the Papacy.

In 1815, at the battle of Tolentino, Joachim Murat was decisively defeated by Frederick Bianchi at the head of Austrian forces, resulting in his abdication. Tolentino returned to papal control until Italian unification in 1861.

In the late 19th century industrial development decisively linked Tolentino economically to the rest of Italy.


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